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Precambrian Earth History

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Title: Precambrian Earth History


1
Chapter 9
Precambrian Earth HistoryThe Proterozoic Eon
2
The Length of the Proterozoic
  • 2 billion years
  • 42.5 of all geologic time
  • yet we review this long episode of Earth and life
    history very briefly

3
Archean-Proterozoic Boundary
  • Geologists have rather arbitrarily placed the
    Archean-Proterozoic boundary at 2.5 billion years
    ago
  • it marks the approximate time of changes in the
    style of crustal evolution

4
Age of Continental Crust
5
Archean vs. Proterozoic
  • Proterozoic is characterized by
  • differing crustal evolution
  • less metamorphism
  • plate tectonics similar to the present
  • less heat!

6
Evolution of Continents
  • Archean cratons assembled during collisions of
    island arcs and minicontinents
  • nuclei around which Proterozoic crust accreted
  • much larger landmasses formed
  • Proterozoic accretion at craton margins probably
    took place more rapidly than today
  • because Earth still possessed more internal heat
  • but the process continues even now

7
Focus on Laurentia
  • Large landmass that consisted of what is now
  • North America
  • Greenland
  • parts of northwestern Scotland
  • some of the Baltic shield of Scandinavia
  • Laurentia originated and underwent important
    growth between 2.0 and 1.8 billion years ago
  • During this time, collisions among various plates
    formed several orogens
  • linear or arcuate deformation belts in which many
    of the rocks have been metamorphosed and intruded
    by magma

8
Proterozoic Evolution of Laurentia
  • Archean cratons were sutured
  • along deformation belts called orogens,
  • thereby forming a larger landmass
  • By 1.8 billion years ago, much of what is now
    Greenland, central Canada, and the north-central
    United States existed
  • Laurentia grew along its southern margin by
    accretion

9
Southern Margin Accretion
  • Laurentia grew along its southern margin
  • by accretion of the Central Plains, Yavapai, and
    Mazatzal orogens

10
Grenville Orogeny
  • A final episode of Proterozoic accretion occurred
    during the Grenville orogeny

11
Building North America
  • By this final stage, about 75 of present-day
    North America existed
  • The remaining 25 accreted along its margins,
    particularly its eastern and western margins,
    during the Phanerozoic Eon

12
Style of Plate Tectonics
  • The present style of plate tectonics
  • involving opening and then closing ocean basins
  • had almost certainly been established by the
    Early Proterozoic
  • In fact, the oldest known complete ophiolite
  • providing evidence for an ancient convergent
    plate boundary
  • is the Jormua complex in Finland
  • It is about 1.96 billion years old
  • similar to younger well-documented ophiolites

13
Jormua Complex, Finland
  • Metamorphosed basaltic pillow lava

14
Early Supercontinent
  • Possible configuration of the Late Proterozoic
    supercontinent Rodinia
  • before it began fragmenting about 750 million
    years ago

15
Ancient Glaciers
  • Very few times of widespread glacial activity
    have occurred during Earth history
  • Most recent one during the Pleistocene (1.6 Ma -
    10 Ka) The Ice Age
  • we also have evidence for Pennsylvanian glaciers
  • two major episodes of Proterozoic glaciation
  • How do we recognize past glacial periods?

16
Proterozoic Glacial Evidence
  • Bagganjarga tillite in Norway
  • overlies striated bedrock surface

17
Ediacaran Fauna
  • The Ediacaran fauna of Australia
  • Tribrachidium heraldicum, a possible primitive
    echinoderm

Spriggina floundersi, a possible ancestor of
trilobites
18
Ediacaran Fauna
  • Pavancorina minchami
  • Restoration of the Ediacaran Environment

19
Ediacaran Fauna
  • Geologists had assumed that the fossils so common
    in Cambrian rocks must have had a long previous
    history
  • little evidence to support this conclusion
  • The discovery of Ediacaran fossils dramatically
    increased our knowledge about this chapter in the
    history of life

20
Represented Phyla
  • Three present-day phyla may be represented in the
    Ediacaran fauna
  • jellyfish and sea pens (phylum Cnidaria)
  • segmented worms (phylum Annelida)
  • primitive members of the phylum Arthropoda (the
    phylum with insects, spiders crabs, and others)
  • One Ediacaran fossil, Spriggina, has been cited
    as a possible ancestor of trilobites
  • Another might be a primitive member of the phylum
    Echinodermata

21
Distinct Evolutionary Group
  • However, some scientists think these Ediacaran
    animals represent an early evolutionary group
    quite distinct from the ancestry of todays
    invertebrate animals
  • Ediacara-type faunas are known from all
    continents except Antarctica
  • collectively referred to as the Ediacaran fauna
  • widespread between 545 and 670 million years ago
  • fossils are rare (lacked durable skeletons)
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